Abstract
Music therapy in the treatment of chronic neurological illness typically focuses on the use of music to address the emotional and psychosocial impact of loss and change stemming from pathology. A range of clinical techniques is described in anecdotal accounts spanning instrumental improvisation, song composition and singing. However, there is scant reference to the musical and emotional experience of singing as a clinical technique with individuals living with chronic degenerative illness. Drawing on the results of an empirical investigation into the effects of music therapy with clients with chronic neurological illness, this paper reveals how singing may be used by clients to monitor their physical disease process.
Grounded theory research with this population has revealed that music therapy elicits processes in which individuals monitor the physical changes caused by their disease process (Magee and Davidson 2004). Based upon these research findings, this paper illustrates that individuals living with illnesses which cause loss of voice function may find the act of singing a highly physical experience. As such, singing may be used to monitor subtle changes which have occurred due to the disease process. Individuals living with degenerative illness may use singing within therapy as a way to defy their illness process and as an expression of life's breath running through the body. Singing and voice work within clinical music therapy is therefore not only a vehicle for emotional expression, but also an invaluable tool in gaining an understanding of the client's experience, offering a boundaried environment for exploration of loss and degeneration. Finally, the paper provides a theoretical framework for the emotional experience of singing songs of personal meaning in therapy.
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